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The Intellectual Origins of Modern Economic Growth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2005

JOEL MOKYR
Affiliation:
Robert H. Strotz Professor of Arts and Sciences, Departments of Economics and History, Northwestern University; and Sackler Professor (by special appointment) Eitan Berglas School of Economics, Tel Aviv University. E-mail: j-mokyr@northwestern.edu.

Abstract

The intellectual origins of the Industrial Revolution are traced back to the Baconian program of the seventeenth century, which aimed at expanding the set of useful knowledge and applying natural philosophy to solve technological problems and bring about economic growth. The eighteenth-century Enlightenment in the West carried out this program through a series of institutional developments that both increased the amount of knowledge and its accessibility to those who could make best use of it. Without the Enlightenment, therefore, an Industrial Revolution could not have transformed itself into the sustained economic growth starting in the early nineteenth century.

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Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2005 The Economic History Association

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